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Fritz Angerstein

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Fritz Angerstein
Born
Fritz Heinrich Angerstein

(1891-01-03)January 3, 1891
DiedNovember 17, 1925(1925-11-17) (aged 34)
Cause of deathDecapitation
Criminal penaltyDeath
Details
DateDecember 1, 1924
Location(s)Haiger, Germany
Killed8
WeaponsHunting dagger
Hand-axe

Fritz Heinrich Angerstein (January 3, 1891 – November 17, 1925) was a German mass murderer, who killed 8 people at his home in Haiger, on December 1, 1924. The subject of a media spectacle, Angerstein, along with Fritz Haarmann and Peter Kürten, is considered one of the "three great mass murderer trials" of the Weimar Republic-era of Germany.

Angerstein was sentenced to death eight times, and was executed in 1925.

Background

Fritz Heinrich Angerstein was born on January 3, 1891 in Dillenburg, German Reich, the seventh of ten children. His father worked as a carpenter, and later as a steelworker, and was also the mayor of Dillenburg.[1][2][3] Angerstein suffered from health problems during his childhood, including regular tuberculosis infections and having a rib surgically removed, but at age 14 began working as a surveyor, before being employed by the Nassauische Bergbau AG. Since 1917, he was procurator of a limestone mine in Haiger, which was taken over by the firm van der Zypen in 1920.[3][4]

In 1911, Angerstein married Käthe Barth, a devout methodist, and the marriage was described as happy, with Angerstein giving the impression of a loving and caring husband.[1][2] Despite this, Käthe was afflicted with severe hysteria and also fell ill with an unknown intestinal disease in 1920.[5][6] His wife's illnesses mentally and physically exhausted Angerstein, who himself almost constantly suffered from various types of tuberculosis.[1] The couple had no children, though Käthe had miscarried six times.[3][7] The relationship with his mother-in-law was said to have been strained, because they were unable to have any children, and because of her poor treatment of his wife. Angerstein related that his mother-in-law often reduced Käthe's diet to soup, due to her ailments, though apparently she often burnt the meal, whereupon his wife would not eat anything at all. According to his own testimony, Angerstein once whipped his mother-in-law with a dog whip out of anger, because Käthe had run away from home due to another burnt meal. In the same instance, Angerstein also decided to shoot his mother-in-law and himself should his wife not return home.[2]

In 1921, Käthe wrote a letter to her husband, telling him that due to her illnesses she could not be the wife he needed. After Angerstein had talked to her about the matter, they made the mutual decision to drown themselves, since they were both regularly sick at that time. However, when Angerstein was carrying his wife half-way into the water, they heard someone sing a song, which according to Angerstein brought them to their senses again, and aborted their suicide attempt.[2][3] The same year, Angerstein, together with his wife, mother-in-law and sister-in-law, moved to Haiger after he received free lodging in a villa belonging to his employer, van der Zypen.[5][8] The ground floor consisted of five bureaus for Angerstein and his assistants, first floor living quarters for himself and his wife, his sister-in-law and mother-in-law, and the attic for their maidservant. His salary was 390 Reichsmark per month, although Angerstein claimed van der Zypen owed him 90,000 Mark.[3] Angerstein got into financial troubles, whereupon he began to embezzle money from his employer, which according to court records the total sum was 14,892 Reichsmark. The fraud was discovered by one of Angerstein's colleagues in November 1924.[6] On the Friday before the murders, Angerstein witnessed his wife put away a notebook containing her last wishes, stating she was expecting to die soon. Angerstein, in the night from Nov. 30 to Dec. 1 found and read the notebook.[3]

On the Saturday before the murders, Angerstein met with his manager named Nix for wage accounting and paid salaries, where Nix confronted him with the discrepancies in the accounting.[2][3] Startled by six shots during the night in front of the house, his wife began suffering from bloody diarrhea, vomiting, fainting and heart problems due to the agitation.[2][3] Angerstein learned the next day that the shots had been fired during a birthday party, and he began to suffer from severe headaches.[3][9]

Murders

The villa where the murders took place.

On the night of November 30 to December 1, 1924, Angerstein had damaged a telephone wire and some water pipes.[8] Between 12 and 1 a.m., Angerstein awoke as his wife suffered from severe heart pain. He wanted to call a doctor, but his wife held him back, instead fetching his mother-in-law.[3] After she returned to her bed, Angerstein sat beside his wife, who was lying in bed, where she read him a letter. Angerstein then changed the pillow case, stained by his wife's vomiting. He overheard his wife and mother-in-law talking about another letter written by his brother-in-law, stating that he had syphilis, and that the disease could spread to other family members, agitating him. He then talked with his wife about the letter, and remembered his wife once telling him that she wanted to die the same hour he died. Angerstein then decided to kill his wife and himself, and when his wife fainted Angerstein fetched his revolver from another room. When he returned to the room his wife was awake, where she grabbed his hand and took his revolver from him, saying "His own wife, Lord forgive him!", before fainting again. Angerstein then fetched his hunting dagger and fatally stabbed his wife 18 times with it.[8] He then ran downstairs to his study and attempted to shoot himself, but both revolvers failed to fire. He then ran down to the cellar, looking for something with which to kill himself. Finding a hand-axe, he intended to cut off his own hand, but hearing his mother-in-law scream he ran back upstairs and killed her because, as he later claimed, he was angry about her having treated his sick wife badly.[2][3]

Angerstein realized that their maidservant, Minna Stoll, was standing in front of him. She ran away and up the stairs to the attic, but just before she reached the door to the attic, Angerstein caught up with her, grabbed her from behind and hit her over the head with the hand-axe, whereupon she collapsed. Angerstein later stated that he killed her because she burned meals, was unclean, and because he and his wife were generally displeased with her. Her body was later found burnt on the first floor.[8] Angerstein then returned to his bedroom and again hacked at the bodies of his mother-in-law and wife, fearing they might get up again.[2] His mother-in-law was still moaning, but Angerstein returned to the kitchen, washed the axe and his hands, sat down and slept for a few hours. When his 18-year-old sister-in-law Ella Barth returned during the night from a train journey, she went upstairs and into the bathroom. Angerstein followed her and killed her with the axe, then covered her up because he could not stand to look at her corpse.[2]

At approximately 7 a.m. on Monday, a book keeper, Ditthart, and a clerk, Kiel, arrived at the villa to work. One after the other Angerstein called them into his study, locked the door and killed them with the axe. During the course of the day he also killed the son of the villa gardener, Geist, and another laborer working for him, Darr, with a hatchet, fearing that they both might have seen the dead bodies.[10] Angerstein's German Shepherd was later found in the locked cellar with its head smashed in.[11] A man named Ebert arrived and Angerstein handed him a letter for his brother, before sending him away. Responding to questions about his dishevelled state, Angerstein answered that he was sick.[citation needed]

Afterwards, Angerstein poured out petrol (maybe brought with a truck later found a few kilometres outside of the town) in his study on the ground floor and the rooms on the first floor.[11] He then went shopping in the city, buying two chocolate bars, according to himself for his "dear wife", and a flashlight.[11] After sunset, Angerstein went back home and set the petrol alight, though the ground floor did not catch fire. He then stabbed himself several times, causing severe but not life-threatening wounds, then called for help.[11] When help arrived, Angerstein claimed he had been attacked by bandits, who had killed everyone in the house and left him for dead.[12] Angerstein told his helpers and the police that he was assaulted in his villa after he returned from town, and some people claimed to have seen 15 to 25 bandits.[13] Angerstein was taken to the hospital in Haiger, where he was operated on, while panic over the imaginary bandits spread across the Haiger, and extra policemen were sent for from Siegen and Wetzlar for protection, and militias were formed.

Georg Popp helped in the investigation of the murders, and the investigators raised doubts about Angerstein's story. The corpses had rigor mortis already set in, thus contradicting Angerstein's claims regarding when the killings had taken place.[11] Angerstein's fingerprints were found on the dagger and on the dead bodies, and there were no signs of a robbery having taken place. During interrogation by the prosecutor, Angerstein denied having committed the killings himself, but often made contradictory statements regarding the deaths.[11] Angerstein was arrested, though he remained in hospital. After the autopsies, he was accused of having committed the murders, and Angerstein finally confessed to his brother in the presence of a police officer.[5][11]

Victims[14]

  • Käthe Angerstein, née Barth, Angerstein's wife
  • Katharina Barth, Angerstein's mother-in-law
  • Minna Stoll, Angerstein's maidservant
  • Ella Barth, 18, Angerstein's sister-in-law
  • Reinhold Diethardt, bookkeeper
  • Heinrich Kiehl, clerk
  • Alex Geiß, Angerstein's gardener
  • Rudi Darr, gardener's assistant

Conviction and execution

Central Prison Freiendiez in Diez, where Angerstein was executed

Out of fear that the public could turn against Angerstein, he was taken to Limburg an der Lahn only two weeks before the trial started on July 1925.[3] The trial was a media spectacle, gaining lots of publicity and coverage, and together with the trials of Fritz Haarmann and Peter Kürten, was considered one of the great mass murderer trials of the Weimar Republic. Angerstein was charged with 13 crimes, among them eight counts of murder, two counts of embezzlement, and one count each of forging documents, arson, and perjury. Angerstein claimed he did not embezzle money, but that van der Zypen had owed him money.[3] A total of 153 witnesses and 27 experts were called.[15] Angerstein admitted to committing bribery and later to embezzlement.[2]

On July 13, after six days of trial, Angerstein was sentenced to death eight times, once for each of the eight murders, and deprived of his civil rights for the rest of his life, while the other charges against him were dismissed. Angerstein accepted the verdict, stating that he did not want mercy and that his deed could only be atoned for with his blood.[16][17][18]

On November 17, 1925, at 8 a.m., Angerstein was executed by decapitation with an axe by executioner Carl Gröpler in the courtyard of the Central Prison Freiendiez in Diez an der Lahn.[19][20]

Aftermath

Possible motives

There was much speculation surrounding the motive behind the murders. It was assumed that Angerstein had been gripped by paranoia due to his embezzlement, and that he was attempting to get rid of witnesses. Reference to this was made in this context to Angerstein's suicide attempt. Rumours circulated to the effect that Angerstein was inspired by the Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, which state that by killing nine people a seal may be activated that provides great riches.[7]

Optogram

The case has gained some notoriety for allegedly being one of the rare instances in which an optogram, a photograph taken from a dead person's retina, played a role in identifying and convicting a murderer. According to reports, one Professor Doehne of Cologne University photographed the retinas of two of Angerstein's victims, yielding one picture showing Angerstein's face, and a second one of Angerstein attacking his gardener with a hatchet. Substantial doubts have been raised about these claims though.[21][22][23]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ a b c Die Glocke; 1925.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Der Angerstein-Prozeß, Coburger Zeitung (July 7, 1925).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cite error: The named reference VZ0607A was invoked but never defined
  4. ^ F 65 - Hüttenwerke Siegerland AG / Hoesch Siegerlandwerke AG, Archive in Nordrhein-Westfalen.
  5. ^ a b c Der Angerstein-Prozeß, Coburger Zeitung (July 10, 1925).
  6. ^ a b Herren, Rüdiger: Freud und die Kriminologie: Einführung in die psychoanalytische Kriminologie; F. Enke, 1973.
  7. ^ a b Davies, Owen: Grimoires: A History of Magic Books; Oxford University Press, 2010.
  8. ^ a b c d Zu dem Überfall in Haiger, Coburger Zeitung (December 3, 1924).
  9. ^ Lethen, Helmut: Cool Conduct: The Culture of Distance in Weimar Germany, trans. Don Reneau; University of California Press, Berkeley/Los Angeles/London 2002.
  10. ^ Geständnis des Haiger Massenmörders, Flörsheimer Zeitung (December 6, 1924) (zweites Blatt)
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Der Raubmord in Haiger, Coburger Zeitung (December 4, 1924).
  12. ^ Der Angerstein-Prozeß, Coburger Zeitung (July 10, 1925); Bandits invade German village, Berkeley Daily Gazette (December 2, 1924).
  13. ^ Bandits invade German village, Berkeley Daily Gazette (December 2, 1924).
  14. ^ Das Blutbad in Haiger, Frankfurter Zeitung (Abendblatt), 5 December 1924; Die Beerdigung der Opfer von Haiger, Frankfurter Zeitung (Abendblatt), 6 December 1924.
  15. ^ Mordprozeß Angerstein, Flörsheimer Zeitung (July 8, 1925).
  16. ^ Das Urteil im Angerstein-Prozeß, Coburger Zeitung (July 14, 1925).
  17. ^ Sentenced to death for murder of eight, The Crawfordsville Review (July 14, 1925)
  18. ^ German court sentences murderer of eight to death eight times, The Evening Independent (July 14, 1925).
  19. ^ Angerstein hingerichtet, Vossische Zeitung (November 17, 1925) (Abend-Ausgabe).
  20. ^ Paralytic who killed 8 of family beheaded, Youngstown Vindicator (November 18, 1925).
  21. ^ Abwege der Rechtsgeschichte: Belichtete Augen – absurde Kriminalistik, Legal Tribune (December 18, 2012).
  22. ^ Ings, Simon: The Eye - A natural history; Bloomsbury Publishing, 2008; p. 61. ISBN 9780747578055
  23. ^ Germany - Cablegram from Berlin, The American Mercury (September 1925).